Individual Ready Reserve

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The Individual Ready Reserve (abbreviated "IRR" and sometimes referred to as the Inactive Ready Reserve) is a category of Reserve Component of the Armed Forces of the United States, composed of former active duty or reserve military personnel who are no longer serving but still have time remaining on their initial eight-year military service obligation, or their subsequent reserve obligation.

U. S. Military contracts for enlisted members are 8 years in length, and can be split between active duty and reserve service (i.e. 4 years active duty and 4 years individual ready reserve, or 8 years ready reserve)

[edit] Activations

29 July 2004:

  • 5,600 members of the IRR, mainly with specialties as military police or civil affairs officers, were called back to active duty to support U.S. forces in Iraq. This activation was the first time that the IRR had been called upon since the 1991 Gulf War, when approximately 20,000 IRR troops were called up in support of Operation Desert Storm.

April 2005:

  • Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has authorized the Army to mobilize up to 6,500 Individual Ready Reservists at any one time;[1]
  • 3,900 IRR members with critical specialties have been called to active duty;
  • About half of those called have reported for duty;
  • About 550 of those called have failed to report for duty, some claiming exemptions, others ignoring their orders.

August 2006:

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Most Individual Ready Reservists Reporting as Ordered
  2. ^ Bush OKs involuntary Marine recall